Delving Where Few Others Have Gone, Leukemia Researchers Open New Path

A Wilmot Cancer Institute study uncovers how a single gene could be at fault in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), one of the deadliest cancers. The breakthrough gives researchers renewed hope that a gene-targeted therapy could improve AML survival rates, which have not budged in recent years.

The gene, known as EVI1, rewires the entire panoply of blood-forming cells and tissues by binding to certain DNA molecules and wreaking havoc. Knowing where EVI1 locks into the genome helps scientists understand the mechanisms that drive the disease at its core.

Now, researchers can envision a new approach to treating AML, focused on blocking EVI1’s ability to bind to other genes, according to the study, published in Nature Communications.

Thanks to immunotherapy and other targeted approaches, treatments for many types of blood cancers have improved greatly but patients with AML have not benefitted as much. AML’s five-year survival rate remains at around 25 percent. Although some leukemia patients can achieve a lasting remission with a blood and marrow transplant, the disease almost always relapses.

Scientists worldwide, including Perkins, have been studying the gene EVI1 for years, looking at its relationship to leukemia from different angles with the goal of finding a new treatment.

Wilmot investigators and co-authors Laura Calvi, M.D., and James Palis, M.D., and those who work in their labs, contributed substantially to the latest insights, Perkins said, by offering new perspectives on the hematopoietic system. They study the cells, organs, and tissues involved in blood production and the factors that may impact cancer development.

EVI1 is at the center of the investigation because when it’s over-expressed — producing 10,000 to 50,000 copies compared to the low levels seen in healthy people — it changes the metabolism of immature blood cells as they become malignant. The collaboration allowed the Wilmot team to discover the importance of what happens after EVI1 is over-expressed and turned on permanently.

The study is believed to be a “first” in a few ways, Perkins said:

It shows in explicit detail how disruption to the blood system leads to an expansion of myeloid cells — crowding out the healthy blood cells that carry oxygen and fight infection. Myeloid cells eventually nurture leukemia production in the bone marrow.

It uses a mouse model that closely mimics the human experience with AML. The disease usually occurs later in adulthood after a rearrangement of chromosomes at 3q26, due to DNA damage.

It documents how and where the single gene in question, EVI1, binds to certain DNA molecules and begins causing problems. Spotlighting this action helps scientists to learn where the disease is targetable.

Other contributors from the URMC include: co-first authors Edward Ayoub, a Pharmacology graduate student in Perkins’ lab and Michael P. Wilson, Ph.D., a postdoctoral research associate in the Perkins lab; Kathleen McGrath, Ph.D., research associate professor in Pediatrics and in the Center for Pediatric Biomedical Research and a longstanding member of Palis’ lab; Allison Li, a graduate student in Calvi’s lab; and Benjamin Frisch, Ph.D., research assistant professor in Medicine and a member of Calvi’s lab.

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